Chris Daukaus Says He Has Better Hands Than ’95 Percent’ of UFC Heavyweight Division

Chris
Daukaus
earned the most significant victory of his career to
date at
UFC Fight Night 185
, as he scored a first-round technical
knockout of Alexey
Oleynik
in a featured heavyweight encounter at the UFC Apex in
Las Vegas on Saturday night.

With three first-round finishes to kick off his promotional tenure,
the 31-year-old Philadelphia native is now a person of interest in
the division.

“This is what careers are made of right now. The light is on the
heavyweight division right now, especially with the amount of
heavyweight headliners,” Daukaus said. “It’s definitely something
I’m not taking for granted. I’m definitely capitalizing on it.

  “I’ve finally got a number next to my name. It’s something
I’ve been striving for. It was definitely something I could grab
and I did that.”

By putting Oleynik away 1:55 into the opening stanza, Daukaus was
able to avoid going to the ground with the Russian submission
specialist. “The Boa Constrictor” entered Saturday night with 46
tapout victories to his credit.

“It could have been better, in my opinion,” Daukaus said. “I made a
few mistakes. I’m going to be picking that apart. He’s as strong as
he looks. There are things I have to work on and I’ll be doing
that.”

Daukaus thwarted Oleynik’s lone takedown attempt and rocked his foe
with a right hand. From there, he teed off with punches and knees
against the fence until referee Herb Dean
stepped in to wave off the contest. Daukaus is now tied for the
UFC’s second-longest active knockout streak with three and is one
of nine fighters in promotion history to begin their career with a
trio of first round finishes.

“Everyone has to get past these hands,” Daukaus said. “As you just
saw, they can’t get past these hands. If they do get past these
hands, it’s a mystery how good my ground game is. I’d rather keep
people in the dark.

  “I have better hands than 95 percent of the division. They
might say I’m one-dimensional—come beat me. Beat me if you can. If
not, just shut up about it.”

As for the rest of 2021, Daukaus hopes to maintain an active
approach. If all goes as planned, he could be ready for title
contention by the following year.

“This was the first fight of the year for me. I’ll gladly take
another two, maybe three, by the end of the year. Then in 2022, No.
1 or No. 2 contender spot. If not, I’m fighting for that title in
2022,” he said.

  “I can’t wait to test myself. I look forward to stepping up
and main eventing some of these cards.”

Martial Arts Videos

By Martial Arts Videos

Melde dich an und werde ein kostenloses Mitglied